THE MAMMALS
SIERRA NEVADA WOLVERINE. Gulo luscus luteus Elliot
Field characters.Size
and proportions of heavily built dog; body stout (pl. 23c),
rather broad; legs short, feet big; tail quite short. Head and body
27-29 inches (682-742 mm.), tail about 10 inches (250-260 mm.), ear
about 2 inches (50-55 mm.); weight 17 to 25 pounds (7.6-11.3 kg.).
Coloration above, yellowish brown, dark on lower back; head (except
crown), feet, under surface of body, and end of tail,
blackish.
Occurrence.Sparse
resident of Hudsonian Zone along crest of Sierra Nevada. Recorded
definitely in head of Lyell Cañon at altitudes of 10,100 and
11,000 feet, July 26 and 25, 1915. Probably inhabits sparse forest.
Solitary.
The wolverine is a rare animal anywhere on the Sierra
Nevada, and it dwells only in the highest parts of these mountains. In
consequence there is but scant information concerning it locally and
much of that is hearsay. Only one of the local trappers in the Yosemite
section had anything to relate concerning the species and he merely
reported one killed in the region prior to 1914. Inclusion of the
species here is based upon the capture of two individuals at the upper
end of Lyell Cañon, late in July of 1915, by Mr. Charles L. Camp
of our party.
Our station at the head of Lyell Cañon was at
9800 feet, but trapping was carried on up to timber line toward Mount
Lyell in an effort to obtain various desirable species. For nearly a
week a certain setting of steel traps was visited daily and baited with
marmot bodies and other similar material. These traps were placed on
bare rocky ground at the side of a thicket of white-bark pines at timber
line (11,000 feet) on a rocky ridge between the McClure and Lyell forks.
The snow was 4 feet deep in places near by. On July 25, a female
wolverine was captured in this setting, and the day following an adult
male was taken in another 'set' not far off, at 10,100 feet.
The first individual was held securely in all three
traps. Nevertheless, it struggled violently, and from time to time
uttered grunting sounds. When the observer placed his gun within reach,
the animal quickly and easily bit off a piece of the black walnut
stock.
The second wolverine captured was held by one hind
foot in a steel trap, but this did not hinder it from going through a
variety of motions limited only by the length of the trap chain. It
climbed readily into a nearby wind-distorted lodgepole pine about three
feet in diameter, using the claws in holding on to the trunk. Several
times while being watched the animal started to dig into the ground,
throwing up the earth at a lively rate; it would then turn over on its
back and wallow in the cool earth, putting its feet into the air while
doing so. Twice the wolverine sat up on its haunches with the forefeet
against its breast after the manner of a bear. When approached very
closely it made a lunge at the aggressor, uttering hoarse growls
somewhat like those of a badger, and wrinkled up its nose, exhibiting
its blunt teeth. The iris of this wolverine looked black; but when the
pupil was dilated, the aqueous humor of the eyeball made the eye look
green at certain angles.
In several other places, as at Vogelsang Lake and
Fletcher Lake, tracks were seen which, chiefly through a process of
elimination, were ascribed to the wolverine. The only other large
carnivore in the high mountains is the Mountain Coyote. But the
wolverine's track is not dog-like; the sole pad on the forefoot is
divided up into small units, whereas the sole pad of the coyote is a
single unit. The badger, which also has a relatively large track, has an
elongated triangular foot pad.
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